After her school wins the coveted United States National Secondary
Education Award, a school principal embarks upon an educational odyssey.
The principal discovers that the reasons for winning the award are a
sham! As her school falls apart, she begins to reflect on the stagnant
school organization and the ineffective prescriptions for improvement.
She wonders why as a democratic nation, American schools do not model
the practice of democracy for students. The principal begins her quest
to unearth the flaws in her own thinking about the way schools work in
her quest to create more democratic schools. Endeavoring to understand
how systems really work, the principal puts her new ideas into practice
and shares with the reader the lessons learned from past practices. This
book presents a guide for principals in the form of rules that suggest
that educational leaders must ask themselves why they do what they do.
It also takes readers through a series of vignettes focused on how
principals can practice democracy in the schoolhouse, while challenging
themselves and their school community.